Siegfried Adolf Kummer

Siegfried Adolf Kummer (born 24 September 1899 in Radeberg, died 1977 in Dresden)[1] was a German mystic and Germanic revivalist. He is also most well known for his revivalism and use of the Armanen runes row. He, along with Friedrich Bernhard Marby, were imprisoned during the Third Reich for being unauthorised occultists.

Siegfried Adolf Kummer from his book "Heilige Runenmacht"

Biography

Original 1932 cover of Siegfried Adolf Kummer’ book "Heilige Runenmacht"

Little is known of his life or of his fate in the wake of the events of the Nazi era.

Kummer, along with Friedrich Bernhard Marby, were criticized by name in a report made to Heinrich Himmler by his chief esoteric runologist Karl Maria Wiligut. Goodrick-Clarke states that they were "censured by Wiligut in his capacity as Himmler's counsellor on magical and religious subjects for bringing the holy Aryan heritage into disrepute and riducule and this criticism may have led to Marby's harsh treatment in the Third Reich."[2][3] But what his fate was is unknown. At least one report[4] has him fleeing Nazi Germany in exile to South America.

In 1927, Kummer founded a "runic school" called Runa, associated with the summer school Bielatal Bärenstein of Georg and Alfred Richter. The runic exercises, comparable to the "runic gymnastics" of Marby, runic dancing and runic songs were taught. Kummer held that

"As a we now can receive various waves by means of a radio device, so the German by means of runic exercises and dances can regulate the influx of invisible ethereal cosmic waves. Those who dismiss this as impossible will never be able to detect thought waves, because they are in disharmony with the cosmic All, and are impeded by racially foreign blood."[5]

Written works

  • Heilige Runenmacht (1932)
  • Runen-Magie(1933)
  • Runen – Raunen: Eine Sammlg eingesandter Berichte nach d. Runenkunden
  • Walhall

References

  1. Profile of Siegfried Adolf Kummer
  2. 'The Occult Roots of Nazism' by Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, page162
  3. Weisthor (i.e. Wiligut) to Himmler, letter dated 2 May 1934, Bundesarchiv, Koblenz, Himmler Nachlass 19.
  4. Flowers, Stephen E. – Introduction to his English translation (Texas, February 1993) of Kummers 'Runen-Magie', 1933
  5. "Wie man nun im Radioapperat verschiedene Wellen aufnehmen kann, so kann der Germane durch Runenübungen und Tänze ebenfalls den Zustrom von unsichtbaren, feinstofflichen Allwellen regulieren. Wer dies für unmöglich hält, wird nie Gedankenwellen aufnehmen können, denn er schwingt mit dem kosmischen All in Disharmonie, ist durch fremdrassiges Blut belastet.""Archived copy". Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 2 January 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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